Federal prosecutors said Daniel used her position, both as a doctor and a Pentecostal minister, to entice people from across the nation to take her herbal product.

Authorities said she marketed and sold the bogus treatment that she and her employees claimed could cure many diseases and conditions, including cancer, multiple sclerosis, stroke, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, diabetes and hepatitis.

Daniel promoted the product under a variety of names — including “C-Extract,” “the natural treatment” and “the herbal treatment” — through a program televised on the Trinity Broadcasting Network, according to court papers.

Federal prosecutors presented evidence that Daniel’s “treatment” did not cure anyone of cancer.

Chemical analysis determined that the product contained sunscreen preservative and beef extract flavoring, among other ingredients, none of which could have had any effect on cancer or other diseases, according to expert testimony.

Some of her patients, relying on her product, died later of complications of cancer.

Daniel faces up to 150 years in prison and $5.5 million in fines when she’s sentenced on Dec. 5.

She wasn’t giving hope. Nothing in this “remedy” would have cured anything, let alone cancer, Multiple Sclerosis or any of the other things listed. The only thing this concoction helped was her pocketbook. I’m surprised she didn’t claim that it cured the common cold.

People like this prey on people who are desperate for cures. It’s an ages-old scam and what makes it worse is that she used used the church as a way to lure in people who place their trust in their faith.